Publication:
No genetic evidence for involvement of alcohol dehydrogenase genes in risk for Parkinson's disease.

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Date

2019-11-07

Authors

Kim, Jonggeol Jeffrey
Bandres-Ciga, Sara
Blauwendraat, Cornelis
Gan-Or, Ziv

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Elsevier Inc.
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Abstract

Multiple genes have been implicated in Parkinson's disease (PD), including causal gene variants and risk variants typically identified using genome-wide association studies. Variants in the alcohol dehydrogenase genes ADH1C and ADH1B are among the genes that have been associated with PD, suggesting that this family of genes may be important in PD. As part of the International Parkinson's Disease Genomics Consortium's efforts to scrutinize previously reported risk factors for PD, we explored genetic variation in the alcohol dehydrogenase genes ADH1A, ADH1B, ADH1C, ADH4, ADH5, ADH6, and ADH7 using imputed genome-wide association study data from 15,097 cases and 17,337 healthy controls. Rare-variant association tests and single-variant score tests did not show any statistically significant association of alcohol dehydrogenase genetic variation with the risk for PD.

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MeSH Terms

Alcohol Dehydrogenase
Genetic Variation
Genome-Wide Association Study
Negative Results
Parkinson Disease
Risk

DeCS Terms

Alcohol deshidrogenasa
Enfermedad de Parkinson
Estudio de asociación del genoma completo
Resultados negativos
Riesgo

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Keywords

ADH1C, Alcohol dehydrogenase, Burden tests, Genetics, Parkinson's disease, Risk

Citation

Kim JJ, Bandres-Ciga S, Blauwendraat C; International Parkinson's Disease Genomics Consortium; Gan-Or Z. No genetic evidence for involvement of alcohol dehydrogenase genes in risk for Parkinson's disease. Neurobiol Aging. 2020 Mar;87:140.e19-140.e22.